Pyruvate-kinase as a novel target molecule

ABSTRACT

This invention relates to the use a pyruvate-kinase or a nucleic acid coding therefor as a target for the modulation of apoptotic processes, particularly as a target molecule for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of apoptosis-associated disorders, such as tumours.

The present invention relates to the use of a pyruvate-kinase or a nucleic acid coding therefor as a target for the modulation of apoptotic processes, particularly as a target molecule for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of apoptosis-associated disorders, such as tumours.

Pyruvate-kinase (ATP:pyruvate 2-O-phosphotransferase, PK), is a rate-controlling glycolytic enzyme and catalyses the formation of pyruvate and ATP from phosphoenolpyruvate and ADP. In mammals, PK exists as four isoenzymes named as M1-, M2-, L- and R-types the expression of which differ from one cell type to another (Tanaka et al. 1967, Ibsen et al. 1974, Nowak et al. 1981). The M2-type considered to be the prototype, is predominant in the fetus, in neuplasias and in undifferentiated or proliferating tissues, but also widely distributed in adult tissues (Mallati et al. 1992, Guminska et al. 1988). This form is progressively replaced by the M1-type in skeletal muscle, heart and brain during differentiation. Carcinogenesis apparently reverses this process. The M1- and M2-type are produced from the same gene by alternative splicing. The difference between these two isoforms is in one exon encoding 51 amino acid residues, in which 21 residues are different. The enzymological property of the M1-type isoenzyme is very different from the other three forms since it is the only one that is allosterically not regulated. The M1-type shows hyperbolic kinetics and is not activated by fructose-1,6-bisphosphate (FBP) in contrast, M2-type shows kinetic curve and is activated by FBP (Saheki et al. 1982).

The glycolytic enzyme glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase exhibits functions unrelated to its glycolytic activity and plays a role in diverse cellular processes. For example GAPDH has been shown to translocate to the nucleus and induce apoptosis, to bind specific t-RNAs and possibly be involved in activation of transcription. There has, however, been no suggestion in the published literature that pyruvate-kinase is associated with apoptotic processes.

Thus, it was surprising that the anti-proliferative somatostatin analogue TT-232 (Kéri et al., 1993a, Kéri et al. 1993b and Kéri et al. 1996) binds to pyruvate-kinase, particularly pyruvate-kinase isoenzyme M2. The binding of TT-232 to pyruvate-kinase leads to a nuclear translocation and an induction of apoptosis. This result demonstrates that pyruvate-kinase is involved in apoptotic processes and represents a target molecule for the development of novel drugs, particularly of drugs against cancer and inflammatory diseases.

In a first aspect the present invention relates to the use of a pyruvate-kinase or a nucleic acid encoding a pyruvate-kinase as a target for the modulation of apoptosis.

A further aspect of the present invention relates to the manufacture of an agent which modulates the activity of pyruvate-kinase for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of an apoptosis-associated disorder.

A third aspect of the present invention relates to a method of identifying novel modulators of apoptosis comprising screening for substances capable of modulating pyruvate-kinase activity.

The term “pyruvate-kinase” as used in the present application encompasses pyruvate-kinases selected from isoenzymes M1, M2, L and R, as well as other isoenzymes. Particularly, the pyruvate-kinase is isoenzyme M1 (Swiss-Prot. number P14618) or isoenzyme M2 (Swiss-Prot. number 14786). The DNA sequence encoding pyruvate kinase isoforms M1 and M2 is disclosed in Genbank Accession number X56494. Pyruvate-kinases are obtainable from human or non-human animal sources, particularly from mammalian sources, such as man, mouse, rat, hamster, monkey, pig, etc. Especially preferred is the human M2-pyruvate-kinase comprising:

-   -   a) the amino acid sequence as shown in Swiss-Prot. number P14786         or     -   b) an amino acid sequence having an identity of at least 80%,         particularly of at least 90% and more particularly of at least         95% thereto, wherein the amino acid sequence identity may be         determined by a suitable computer-program, such as GCG or BLAST.

Furthermore, the term “pyruvate-kinase” encompasses recombinant derivatives or variants thereof, as well as fragments thereof having biological activity. These derivatives, variants and fragments thereof may be obtained as expression products from allelic variant genes or from recombinantly altered ones, e.g. modified or truncated genes and/or as products of protolytic cleavage. The term “biological activity” or “activity” in context with pyruvate-kinase preferably comprises the ability to modulate apoptosis, particularly the binding to the somatostatin analogue TT-223 and/or the translocation into the nucleus. Particularly important residues for pyruvate-kinase activity are the amino acid residues 334-420 containing a nuclear localisation signal.

A particularly preferred pyruvate-kinase variant is a nuclear pyruvate-kinase isoform which differs from cytosolic pyruvate-kinase in that it exhibits a higher electrophoretic mobility. The nuclear isoform may be obtained from the cytosolic isoform by nuclear translocation and processing.

The pyruvate-kinase protein is encoded by a nucleic acid which may be a DNA or an RNA. Preferably, the nucleic acid comprises

-   -   (a) the nucleic acid sequence as shown in Genbank Accession         number X56494 or complementary thereto     -   (b) a nucleic acid sequence corresponding to the sequence         corresponding to (a) within the scope of degeneracy of the         genetic code or     -   (c) a nucleic acid sequence hybridizing under stringent         conditions with a sequence of (a) and/or (b).

The term “hybridization under stringent conditions”, according to the present application is used as described in Sambrook et al., Molecular Cloning, A Laboratory Manual, Cold Spring Harbor, Laboratory Press (1989), 1.101-11.104. Consequently, hybridization under stringent conditions occurs when a positive hybridization signal is still detected after washing for 1 h with 1×SSC and 0.1% SDS at 55° C., preferably at 62° C. and most preferably 68° C., in particular for 1 h in 0.2×SSC and 0.1% SDS at 55° C., preferably at 62° C. and most preferably at 68° C. A nucleotide sequence hybridizing under such washing conditions with a sequence as shown in the sequence listing or a complementary nucleotide sequence or a sequence within the scope of degeneracy of the genetic code is encompassed by the present invention.

The nucleic acid molecules of the invention may be recombinant nucleic acid molecules generated by recombinant methods, e.g. by known amplification procedures such as PCR. On the other hand, the nucleic acid molecules can also be chemically synthesized nucleic acids. Preferably, the nucleic acid molecules are present in a vector, which may be any prokaryotic or eukaryotic vector, on which the nucleic acid sequence is present preferably under control of a suitable expression signal, e.g. promoter, operator, enhancer etc. Examples of prokaryotic vectors are chromosomal vectors such as bacteriophages and extra chromosomal vectors such as plasmids, wherein circular plasmid vectors are preferred. Examples of eukaryotic vectors are yeast vectors or vectors suitable for higher cells, e.g. insect cells or mammalian cells, plasmids or viruses.

The pyruvate-kinase is capable of binding somatostatin analogue TT-232 and mediating its effect, particularly its effect to stimulate apoptotic processes. Thus, a stimulation of apoptosis may be obtained by increasing the amount and/or activity of pyruvate-kinase, particularly the nuclear translocation activity. In contrast thereto, an inhibition of apoptosis may be obtained by reducing the activity of pyruvate-kinase, particularly the nuclear translocation activity.

A preferred embodiment of the present invention comprises increasing the activity of a pyruvate-kinase in a target cell or a target organism, particularly a mammalian cell or a mammal including a human being. This increase in activity may be accomplished by administering a substance capable of binding to pyruvate-kinase and stimulating its apoptotic activity, particularly its nuclear translocation activity. This activator may be a low molecular weight substance or an anti-pyruvate-kinase antibody, e.g. a polyclonal antiserum, a monoclonal antibody, antibody fragments, recombinant antibodies etc. In a further preferred embodiment the invention comprises increasing the expression of pyruvate-kinase in a target cell or a target organism. This increase may be accomplished by administration of pyruvate-kinase, fragments or analogues thereof, or by gene-therapeutic administration of pyruvate-kinase encoding nucleic acids.

A further preferred embodiment of the present invention comprises reducing the activity of a pyruvate-kinase in a target cell or a target organism. This reduction in activity may be accomplished by administering a substance capable of inhibiting the apoptotic activity of pyruvate-kinase. This inhibitor may be a low molecular weight substance or an anti-pyruvate-kinase antibody. Further, the expression of pyruvate-kinase in a target cell or target organism may be reduced by administration of anti-sense oligonucleotides, ribozymes or other expression-inhibiting nucleic acids.

Due to its activity, pyruvate-kinase is a suitable target for the manufacture of agents for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of an apoptosis-associated disorder, particularly a hyperproliferative disease which may be selected from tumours, e.g. colon cancer, breast cancer or melanomas and inflammatory diseases, e.g. neuronal inflammatory diseases, such as neuroarthritis, or a degenerative disease.

The administration of an pyruvate-kinase-modulating agent is preferably in the form of a pharmaceutical composition which additionally comprises suitable pharmaceutically acceptable carriers, diluents or adjuvants. The composition may be an injectable solution, a suspension, a cream, an ointment, a tablet, etc. The composition may be suitable for diagnostic, preventive or therapeutic applications, particularly in the field of cancer. The dosage and mode of administration route depends on the type and the variety of the disorder to be treated and may be determined readily by a skilled practitioner.

For example, the administration of antibodies may be carried out according to known protocols, e.g. as described by Baselga (2000). The administration in form of nucleic acids may also be carried out according to known protocols, such as described by Monia (2000).

The administration of pyruvate-kinase modulators may be combined with the administration of other active agents, particularly anti-tumour agents, e.g. cytotoxic substances and MAP-kinase inhibitors, such as PD98059 and UO126.

Still a further embodiment of the present invention is a method of identifying novel modulators of apoptosis comprising screening for substances capable of modulating pyruvate-kinase activity. Particularly, the invention relates to a method of identifying substances capable of binding to pyruvate-kinase and stimulating translocation to the nucleus.

The screening method may be a high throughput screening assay, wherein a plurality of substances is tested in parallel. The screening assay may be a cellular assay or a molecular assay, wherein an interaction of a substance to be tested with pyruvate-kinase activity is determined. Pyruvate-kinase may be provided in a cellular system, preferably in a cellular system overexpressing pyruvate-kinase, e.g. a cell culture or an animal model. On the other hand, non-cellular systems may be used, e.g. pyruvate-kinase containing cell fractions or substantially isolated and purified pyruvate-kinase. Any active substance identified by this method, e.g. any substance capable of modulating, particularly stimulating nuclear translocation of pyruvate-kinase may be used as a pharmaceutical agent or as a lead structure which is further modified to improve pharmaceutical properties. Thus, the invention further comprises formulating a pyruvate-kinase modulator, as identified by the method as described above or a substance obtained therefrom, e.g. by chemical derivatization or by molecular modeling, as a pharmaceutical composition together with pharmaceutically acceptable carriers, diluents or adjuvants.

The present invention is explained in more detail in the following Figures and Examples:

FIG. 1. Schematic representation of the generated pyruvate-kinase mutants.

FIG. 2. Effect of different pyruvate-kinase deletion mutants on TT-232 induced cell death.

FIG. 3. Localisation of pyruvate-kinase. NIH3T3 cells were untreated (A) or treated with 50 μM TT-232 for 4 hours (B). Cells were fixed with methanol, blocked with PBS+3% BSA and subjected to immuno-staining with polyclonal PK-M2 specific primary and FITC labelled secondary antibody (green). Nuclei were visualized with propidium-iodide staining (red, insert picture).

FIG. 4. Nuclear translocation of the pyruvate-kinase upon different apoptotic stimuli. Cos-7 cells were transiently transfected with pEGFP-PK-M2 eukaryotic expression plasmid (producing wild type pyruvate-kinase N-terminally fused to GFP)

FIG. 5. Nuclear translocation of the pyruvate-kinase deletion mutants upon apoptotic stimuli. Cos-7 cells were transiently transfected with pEGFP-PK-M2 eukaryotic expression plasmid (producing different deletion mutants of the pyruvate-kinase N-terminally fused to GFP) and 48 hours after transfection cells were untreated (A-L) or treated with 50 μM TT-232 for 4 hours (D′-L′). (Ex: 485 nm=GFP, Ex: 390=propidium-iodide)

FIG. 6. In vitro binding of somatostatin and TT-232 to rabbit muscle pyruvate-kinase.

FIG. 7. Effect of overexpression of pyruvate-kinase on sensitivity towards TT-232. (A) Western-blot of total cell lysates from 293HEK with or without overexpressing HA-tagged wild type PK-M2. (B) stably transfected cells were treated with increasing concentration of TT-232 for 24 hours and the amount of living cells was measured by MTT assay. (n=32, *: p<0.005, **: p<0.001 determined by student's T-test)

FIG. 8. Subcellular localisation of endogenous PK-M2 upon peroxide or UV stimulation. Cos-7 cells were untreated, treated with 50 μM TT-232 (A), 100 μM hydrogen-peroxide (B), or 120 mJ/cm² UV (C) and incubated for different times as indicated. Cells were separated into cytosolic (c) or nuclear (n) fractions loaded in triplicate and blotted with PK-M2 (uppest panels), Erk-2 (middle panels) or Histone H1 (lowest panels).

FIG. 9. Effect of nuclear targeted PK-M2 on cell growth. (A and C) Cos-7 cells were transfected for 5 hours with empty vectors, pEGFP-PK-M2 (PKM2) or with pEYFP-PKM2-NLS (PKM2-NLS) (A) or pEGFP-PK-M1 (PKM2) or with pEYFP-PKM1-NLS (D). Cells were trypsinized, plated into 96 well plates, incubated for 24, 48, 72 hours in FCS containing medium, and cell density was measured with MTT assay. Cells were let to adhere for 10 hours, were measured and this was considered as zero time-point (n=12 of three independent experiments). (B and D) A portion of the transfected cells was incubated for 48 hours, separated by 6-15% SDS-gradient gel electrophoresis and analysed in Western-blot with GFP antibody (upper panel). Reprobing the filter with tubulin antibody (lower panel) showed equal loading.

FIG. 10. Effect of nuclear targeted PK-M2 on apoptosis. Cos-7 cells were transfected with pEGFP (A, A′), pEYFP-NLS (B, B′), pEGFP-PKM2 (C, C′) or pEYFP-PKM2-NLS (D, D′), pEGFP-PKM1 (E, E′) or pEYFP-PKM1-NLS (F, F′) incubated for 48 hours in FCS containing media. Cells were fixed, nuclei were stained with Hoechst and analysed under fluorescent microscope for GFP (A-F) and for nuclear staining (A′-F′). Highly fluorescent, condensed, fragmented nuclei were considered as being apoptotic (arrows).

FIG. 11. Detection of DNA degradation. (A and B) Cos-7 cells were transfected with different constructs, incubated for 48 hours in FCS containing media, samples were divided in two parts, and DNA was extracted and analysed on 0.6% agarose gel. (C and D) second part of the sample was analysed for protein expression. Total cell lysates were loaded on 6-15% gradient gel and analysed in Western-blot with GFP antibody (upper panel). Reprobing the filter with tubulin antibody (lower panel) showed equal loading.

FIG. 12. Expression of kinase deficient pyruvate-kinase in Cos-7 cells. Total cell lysates were loaded on 6-15% gradient gel and analysed in Western-blot with GFP antibody (upper panel, GFP is indicated by arrowheads and GFP-pyruvate kinase M2 fusion proteins by arrows). Reprobing the filter with tubulin antibody (lower panel) showed equal loading.

FIG. 13. Pyruvate-kinase activity of Cos-7 cells overexpressing wild type (PKM2wt) or kinase deficient pyruvate-kinase M2 (PKM2KM) Total cell lysates were assayed for pyruvate-kinase activity by LDH coupled assay. (n=6).

FIG. 14. Effect of nuclear targeted kinase deficient PK-M2 on apoptosis. Cos-7 cells were transfected with pEYFP-NLS (GFP-NLS), pEYFP-PKM2wt-NLS (GFP-NLS PKM2wt) or pEYFP-PKM2 KIM-NLS (GFP-NLS PKM2 K/M) incubated for 48 hours in FCS containing media. Cells were fixed, nuclei were stained with Hoechst and analysed under fluorescent microscope for GFP (upper part):and for nuclear staining (lower part). Highly fluorescent, condensed, fragmented nuclei were considered as being apoptotic (arrows).

EXAMPLES

The apoptotic effect of a new tumour selective somatostatin analogue was studied; TT-232 and it was found that the compound binds to pyruvate-kinase M2. Pyruvate-kinase M2 isoform was cloned from A431 epidermoid carcinoma cell line derived RNA with PCR. Several deletion mutants of the pyruvate-kinase isoform M2 were generated in the eukaryotic expression vector pCDNA3.1 (Invitrogen) as shown in FIG. 1.

The effect of the mutants on the induction of apoptosis by TT-232 was investigated in Cos-7 cells transiently overexpressing these mutants. The cells were transfected at 70% confluency with 1 μg DNA using the Lipofectamine method. Apoptosis was induced 48 hours after transfection with 25 μM TT-232 and cells were counted 24 hours later. In order to discriminate between living or dying cells methyl-blue exclusion was used (FIG. 2).

The overexpression of the N-terminal 100 amino acid of the pyruvate-kinase molecule was sufficient to block the effect of TT-232 somatostatin analogue. This result suggests that pyruvate-kinase, similarly to GAPDH, plays a role in apoptosis. However, since the activity of pyruvate-kinase was not affected by treatment with TT-232 this apoptotic effect is independent of the catalytic activity of the enzyme.

Previously the binding of PK to tubulin was reported (Ovadi et al. 1999) and TT-232 was found to inhibit this interaction. Therefore, the localisation of pyruvate-kinase was studied in detail. NIH3T3 cells were untreated (FIG. 3A) or treated with 50 μM TT-232 for 4 hours (FIG. 3B), fixed with methanol and subjected to immuno-staining with polyclonal PK-M2 isoform specific and FITC labelled secondary antibody. The nucleus was visualized with propidium-iodide and staining was detected by laser confocal microscopy.

FIG. 3 demonstrates that pyruvate-kinase translocates to the nucleus during treatment with the somatostatin analogue TT-232. In order to see whether this effect is a general process during apoptosis, the nuclear translocation was investigated after hydrogen peroxide and UV treatment. Cos-7 cells were transiently transfected with pEGFP-PK-M2 eukaryotic expression plasmid and 48 hours after transfection cells were treated with 1 mM hydrogen peroxide for 4 hours. Cells were treated with 60 J/cm² UV radiation and incubated for different times. Cells were fixed with 1% glutaraldehyde and analysed with fluorescent microscope and InoVision confocal imaging software. FIG. 4 shows that the nuclear translocation of the pyruvate-kinase occurs upon treatment with peroxide-peroxide and UV confirming that the translocation of pyruvate-kinase is a general phenomenon.

Finally, we studied the location of the nuclear localisation signal. Therefore several truncated fragments of the pyruvate-kinase were fused to GFP and the localisation of these fragments was studied upon treatment with the TT-232 somatostatin analogue. The transiently transfected Cos-7 cells were untreated or treated with 50 μM TT-232 for 4 hours. Cells were fixed with 1% glutaraldehyde and the localisation of GFP was detected and analysed with fluorescent microscope and InoVision confocal imaging software. Nuclei were stained with propidium-lodine (FIG. 5).

The nuclear translocation was detectable with wild type and ΔC mutant (amino acids 1-420) but not with PK1-334 truncated mutant. Therefore, the pyruvate-kinase protein has a nuclear localisation signal between amino acids 334-420.

We previously isolated pyruvate-kinase M2 as the receptor for the anticancer drug TT-232. To confirm the interaction between pyruvate-kinase M and somatostatin or TT-232 we performed an in vitro binding assay with isolated rabbit muscle pyruvate-kinase and ¹²⁶I-somatostatin (SS-14). The binding constant (given as IC₅₀ values) for SS-14 or TT-232 was measured by competition between radio-labelled SS-14 and “cold” peptides (FIG. 6) and the radioactivity was measured with Phospholmager following gel-electrophoresis of crosslinked proteins.

To investigate the biological role of PK-M2 in the anticancer effect of TT-232 we generated stable 293HEK cells overexpressing HA-tagged wild type PK-M2 and we measured the sensitivity of these cells to TT-232 concentrations. As shown in FIG. 7 increasing the amount of pyruvate-kinase protein in cells results increased sensitivity to TT-232, suggesting those pyruvate-kinase plays an important role in the effect of the drug.

In untreated cells, PK-M2 was cytoplasmic. TT-232, hydrogen peroxide and UV induced the nuclear translocation of PK-M2 preceding the appearance of the apoptotic morphology. This result supported our previous data that, like GAPDH, pyruvate-kinase translocates into the nucleus upon apoptotic stimuli. In order investigate further Cos-7 cells were treated, separated into cytosolic and nuclear fractions by NP-40 lysis and analysed with polyclonal PKM2 specific antibody (Weernink et al., 1988) for endogenous PK-M2 by Western-blots. To rule out cross contamination, samples were loaded in triplicate and blotted with PK-M2, Erk-2 or Histone H1 antibodies. As shown in FIG. 8, TT-232, hydrogen peroxide and UV treatment induced the translocation of the endogenous PK-M2 into the nucleus with similar kinetics.

However, the enzyme present in the nucleus showed increased electrophoretic mobility, which is probably due to proteolytic cleavage or to dephosphorylation. To test the role of proteases we pre-treated Cos-7 cells with serine-protease (AEBSF, TPCK), caspase (ZDEVD) or calpain (ALLN) inhibitor, but were not able to revert this effect. This suggests that none of these proteases are responsible for the apparent processing.

Further, we investigated the role of the M2 isoform in the nucleus. Therefore, PK-M2 and PK-M1 was subcloned into pEYFP-Nuc vector carrying the SV-40 large T antigen nuclear localisation signal fused to GFP and Cos-7 cells were transfected with the different constructs. After 5 hours cells were trypsinized and plated into 96 well and 6 well plates and grown for different times. After 10 hours MTT was added to one of the plates, was measured and this was considered as zero time point. MTT assays demonstrated a significant cell growth inhibition in cells transfected with the nuclear-targeted NLS-PK-M2, while the growth properties of Cos-7 cells carrying GFP, GFP-NLS, PK-M1, NLS-PK-M1 or PK-M2 were unaffected (FIG. 9A and C). To confirm the expression of the GFP construct, Western-blots with a GFP antibody were carried out from total cell lysates out of the 6 well plates and reprobed with tubulin antibody (FIG. 9B and D).

This result suggested that the nuclear translocation of PK-M2 inhibits cell growth and/or induces apoptosis. We analysed transfected Cos-7 cells stained with Hoechst dye by fluorescent microscopy. Highly fluorescent, condensed or fragmented nuclei that showed patches of compact chromatin were considered as being apoptotic. FIG. 10 shows that cells expressing the fusion protein GFP-PKM2, GFP-PKM1 or GFP-NLS-PKM1 showed normal nuclear staining (FIG. 4C,E,F,C′,E′ and F) similar to cells carrying GFP or GFP-NLS (FIG. 10A-B′). At the same time, GFP-PK-M2-NLS was found in the nucleus and cells expressing the protein showed apoptotic morphology (FIG. 10D and D′).

This result supports that pyruvate-kinase translocation upon apoptotic stimuli is important for the commitment to cell death. This is in conjunction with previous results demonstrating that GAPDH nuclear translocation is involved in apoptosis. In order to test the effect of PK-M2-NLS overexpression on DNA fragmentation, Cos-7 cells were transfected with different constructs, following 48 hours incubation, and DNA was extracted and analysed by agarose gel electrophoresis. Expression of nuclear-targeted PK-M2 induced DNA degradation into distinct larger fragments (3500, 7000 bp) that was different from classical DNA-laddering (FIG. 11).

Since DNA degradation during apoptosis is a multi-step process resulting first large DNA cleavage products than finally oligonucleosomal fragments, we propose that pyruvate-kinase is involved in an early step of DNA degradation, and other factors, like activation of caspases, are necessary for the further processing. Since, overexpressed nuclear targeted PK-M2 was sufficient for cell death independently on the endogenous protein, this effect is likely not due to the inhibition of the glycolysis and the depletion of ATP from cells. This hypothesis is supported by the fact that though GAPDH is related to degenerative conditions in Huntington's disease, the glycolytic activity of the enzyme does not appear to be altered (Kagedal et al., 2001). To test the requirement of the activity of pyruvate-kinase in the nucleus we generated kinase deficient PK-M2 (PKM2K/M) and transfected transiently into Cos-7 cells. First, we tested the expression and processing of the different fusion proteins on Western-blots (FIG. 12).

Next, we measured the pyruvate-kinase catalytic activity from total cell lysates (FIG. 13). Overexpression of the wild type PK-M2 significantly increased the overall PK activity (p>0.005), while the PK activity in kinase deficient mutant expressing cells was reduced compared to mock transfected cells (p>0.0001). This suggests that PKM2 K269M mutation, which affects the ATP binding site leads to catalytic inactivation of PKM protein. This is supported by the fact that overexpression of PKM2K/M mutant also interfered with the endogenous PK activity and resulted in decreased overall PK activity.

To investigate the requirement of the activity of pyruvate-kinase in the nucleus we analysed transiently transfected Cos-7 cells for apoptosis by Hoechst staining (FIG. 14).

Taken together pyruvate-kinase was found to be the receptor of a potent antitumour agent with strong apoptotic effect. Further results showed that pyruvate-kinase plays an important role in the apoptotic process, furthermore the enzyme translocates into the nucleus. Nuclear translocation of PK seems to be a general phenomenon, since in oxidative stress (hydrogen-peroxide) or in UV induced apoptosis pyruvate-kinase was found in the nucleus. The nuclear pyruvate-kinase isoform differs from cytosolic pyruvate-kinase in that it exhibits a higher electrophoretic mobility.

It is concluded that like GAPDH, pyruvate-kinase is involved in the apoptotic process and could be a target molecule for the development of drugs against cancer and inflammatory diseases.

REFERENCES

Tanaka, T., Harano, Y., Sue, F. and Morimura, H. (1967) J. Biochem. (Tokyo) 62, 71-91.

Nowak, T. and Suelter, C. (1981) Mol. Cell. Biochem. 35, 65-75.

Ibsen, K. and Trippet, P. (1974) Arch. Biochem. Biophys. 570-580.

Mallati, A., Yucel, M., Altinors, N. and Gunduz, U. (1992) Cancer Biochem. Biophys. 13, 33-41.

Guminska, M., Stachurska, M. B. and Ignacak, J. (1988) Biochem. Biophys. Acta 966, 207-213.

Saheki, S., Saheki, K. and Tanaka, T. (1982) Biochem. Biophys. Acta 704, 484-493.

Kéri, Gy., et al. (1993a) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 191, 681-687.

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Kéri, Gy., et al. (1996), Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93, 12513-12518.

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Monia (2000), Cancer Invest. 18, 635-650.

Vertessy, B. G., Bankfalvi, D., Kovacs, J., Low, P., Lehotzky, A. and Ovadi, J. (1999) Biochem. Biophys. Res. Comm. 254, 430-435.

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1. Use of a pyruvate-kinase or a nucleic acid encoding a pyruvate-kinase as a target for the modulation of apoptosis.
 2. The use of claim 1 comprising a stimulation of apoptosis by increasing the activity of pyruvate-kinase.
 3. The use of claim 1 comprising an inhibition of apoptosis by reducing the activity of pyruvate-kinase.
 4. The use of any one of claims 1-4 wherein the activity comprises a translocation to the nucleus.
 5. The use of any one of claims 1-4 wherein the pyruvate-kinase is selected from isoenzymes M1, M2, L and R.
 6. The use of claim 4 wherein the pyruvate-kinase is isoenzyme M2.
 7. The use of any one of claims 1-6 for the manufacture of an agent for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of an apoptosis-associated disorder.
 8. The use of claim 7, wherein the disorder is a hyperproliferative disease, e.g. selected from tumours and inflammatory diseases.
 9. A method of identifying novel modulators of apoptosis comprising screening for substances capable of modulating pyruvate-kinase activity.
 10. The method of claim 9 wherein the activity comprises a translocation to the nucleus.
 11. The method of claim 9 or 10 further comprising formulating a pyruvate-kinase modulator or a substance obtained therefrom as a pharmaceutical composition together with pharmaceutically acceptable carriers, diluents or adjuvants.
 12. The method of claim 11 wherein the pharmaceutical composition is suitable for the diagnosis, prevention or treatment of an apoptosis-associated disorder, such as a hyperproliferative disease, e.g. selected from tumours and inflammatory processes.
 13. Nuclear pyruvate-kinase isoform. 